The Life of General Villa (partially found silent film; 1914): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:


==History==
==History==
Around 1914, General Francisco Villa needed funds for the Mexican Revolution, so he asked the Mutual Film Corporation (by that time directed by D.W. Griffith) to produce a film about the Mexican Revolution, with Francisco Villa receiving 25,000$ in advance and 50% of the movie's earnings. The movie was eventually filmed, but the contract was soon canceled because of the deteriorating relationship between the USA and Francisco Villa. Villa was left with no help to produce his masterpiece, and the film was quietly forgotten in time.
Around 1914, General Francisco Villa needed funds for the Mexican Revolution, so he asked the Mutual Film Corporation (by that time directed by D.W. Griffith) to produce a film about the Mexican Revolution, with Francisco Villa receiving 25,000$ in advance and 50% of the movie's earnings. The movie was eventually filmed, but the contract was soon canceled because of the deteriorating relationship between the USA and Francisco Villa. Villa was left with no assistance to produce his masterpiece, and the film was quietly forgotten in time.


==Videos==
==Videos==

Revision as of 02:16, 2 December 2017

Lmwtan cleanup.png


This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its lack of content and use of first person.



Francisco Villa.jpg

Francisco Villa.

Status: Partially Found

The Life of General Villa was a 1914 film produced by Mutual Film Corporation, which is believed to be the first social uprising portrayed in a film.

Plot

The Life of General Villa was about a battle in the Mexican Revolution between the warring Conventionalists and the Constitutionalists, and was mainly focused on the battle between both parts.

History

Around 1914, General Francisco Villa needed funds for the Mexican Revolution, so he asked the Mutual Film Corporation (by that time directed by D.W. Griffith) to produce a film about the Mexican Revolution, with Francisco Villa receiving 25,000$ in advance and 50% of the movie's earnings. The movie was eventually filmed, but the contract was soon canceled because of the deteriorating relationship between the USA and Francisco Villa. Villa was left with no assistance to produce his masterpiece, and the film was quietly forgotten in time.

Videos

Fragment of slient film.

Another fragment (minute 6:57).

External Links